From Reuters:
“War makes
life even harder for Ukraine's visually impaired”
(Vladimir
Bezruk, 65, serves food to Victor Solovyanenko, 54, who is visually impaired,
at a hostel for the blind, amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Kharkiv,
Ukraine August 10, 2022.)
Viktor
Solovyanenko has gone out as little as possible since Russia invaded Ukraine
because he fears stepping on unexploded munitions or sharp objects. He is part
of a small community of visually impaired people in the eastern city of Kharkiv
who can hear the war but cannot see the damage wrought by nearly six months of
Russian bombardment. "Potentially, I could be stepping on something that
might explode. It’s horrible, really horrible. It's dangerous for me to go outside,"
Solovyanenko, 54, told Reuters. "I try to walk around the city as little
as possible because it's dangerous."
(Victor
Solovyanenko, 54, talks with Natalia Pokutna, 58, and Tatyana Medvedenko, 48,
who are visually impaired, in the corridor of a hostel for the blind, amid
Russia's invasion of Ukraine, in Kharkiv, Ukraine August 9, 2022.)
He lives in a
hostel run by the Ukrainian Society of the Blind that provided shelter for 60
people before Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24. Many have now fled abroad but
18 remain. Solovyanenko touches the walls to feel his way around the hostel but
can perform tasks such as ironing. He shares meals with fellow resident Natalia
Pokutnia. "Everyone laughs at this, but I have a good visual memory. I
remember where to go, but if there's a pit, I will certainly fall right into
it," Pokutnia said. Because she cannot see, she found the start of the war
confusing and chaotic. "At first, we didn't understand what was going on.
Like seriously, everything got so chaotic. I probably heard airplanes, I
haven't seen them myself, people told me that," she said. "We
immediately covered and closed the window so that we wouldn't be visible. The
guys told me it was horrifying, they saw yellow round spots flying around.
Here, everything was moving and shaking. It was horrible."
Ukraine drove
Russian forces back from the outskirts of Kharkiv in May but the city,
Ukraine's second largest, remains under fire. Russia has denied targeting
civilians, but many residential buildings in the city have been damaged.
^ I cannot
imagine how difficult it is for the Blind in Ukraine to deal with Russia’s War
there. They can’t see the Explosions or the Russian Soldiers coming to kill
them. Life was hard for them before Russia’s Invasion and now it has become
deadly.
Just another
group of Innocent Ukrainian Men, Women and Children suffering because of the
Russians. ^
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